Washington – Virginia Democrat, Sen Mark Warner said on Sunday that President Trump bill It is near a final vote in the Senate, a “political albatross” for the Republican, which cites its estimated impact on social security trap and its estimated impact on national debt.
Warner said, “I think many of my Republican friends know that they are walking on a plank, and we will see if those who were calm will really dare to trust their faith.”
The Senate is working through the weekend because the GOP gives a push to pass the law, known as “Big, Beautiful Bill”, to get a bill on the President’s desk before the time limit of 4 July. The House approved the bill last month, but the Senate has given its impression on a large -scale package, which expands the 2017 tax deduction of Mr. Trump and will fund Border Security, Defense and Energy Production Priorities, Costs, which are offsett due to deduction in health and nutritional programs. The Congress budget office estimated that the law would increase the deficit of about 3.3 trillion dollars in the next decade.
In addition to the increase in national debt, Warner criticized the bill for toll, warning that it would take access to rural hospitals, health insurance, food aid and clean energy jobs.
The Senate is expected to start a marathon on Sunday night as the bill is near the last route. After this, the upper chamber changes will return home for a signoff, before he could visit the President’s desk for his signature.
The Senate Republican budget reconciliation is working to pass the law under the process, which allows the party to move forward without support. This process means that Senate Democrats have some mechanisms to combat the bill, which they oppose largely, in addition to a vote delay. The Senate Minority leader Chak Shumar forced the bill to read the bill on the floor in his entirety on Saturday night, which pushed back the debate over the bill for more than 12 hours.
Asked why the Democrats are expected to widely oppose the bill, when there are provisions within it that they can see favorably, such as a provision of expansion of child tax credit and a provision limiting taxes on tips, Warner said, “You can put as much lipstick on this pig as you want.”
Virginia Democrat suggested that Bill could lose support from Republican, saying that “it did not end until it ends.” He said that while Mr. Trump is “capable of keeping his party in an unprecedented manner, the” bill “will come back and cut them.”
All but two Republicans Voted to move forward Remedy on Saturday in a major test vote. But after the victory of the GOP, after hours of joining hands, a handful of Republican would prevent the law from moving forward. The vote remained open for more than three hours on Saturday night as the holdouts assured the bill with the Senate GOP leaders. And Vice President JD Vance was in hand to break a possible tie vote, although his vote was not eventually needed. He attended a meeting with a GOP holdout at the majority leader’s office on Saturday night.
Vance’s presence in Capital came when the White House pressured the Republican in the Congress to bring a law to the President’s desk. In a true social post on Saturday night, Mr. Trump indicated that he, one of the opponents of the bill, GOP Sen. Thom Tilis of North Carolina will work to support primary challenges, which are ready to reunite in 2026.
Gop rape. Michael McCall of Texas, which also appeared on the “Face the Nation” on Sunday, said that the Republican said in the House, “If they protest the measures citing pressure from the President and American people, their jobs are at risk. He said” Our base will not take us back to the office if we do not vote on it. “
McCall said, “Everyone in the House, they know that they are not on this thing.”
Texas Republican said that when he returns to the House due to his funding for border security and defense with tax cut extensions, he is planning to support the remedy. And he predicted that it would also see support among fiscal huxa, who have opposed the law.
“At the end of the day, I think they are going to vote for it,” McCall said.